Orchids in the Snow Review

Orchids in the Snow
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This book was given to me as a Christmas present and I have already given it to a good friend to read with the stipulation that she return it to me. It takes a fictitional yet real look at women and men in the military and the roles they play professionally and socially. I am not in the military but have worked many years ago (at the very end of the Vietnam war) for a short while at a military installation plus I have had several close friends who were military officers. Even though the characters in this book are all military personnel and their spouses or civilian employees at military bases, their lives and problems make you look at your life and examine what is important to you as you read of their travails. The relationships and changes occurring as life's circumstances change are explored intimately and empatheticly. For all of us baby boomers who are entering middle age, it is a thought provoking look at our own lives and values. Charlie Hudson is an excellent, entertaining new author who I hope will write many more books.

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Orchids in the Snow is narrated by Andrea Randall, wife of Colonel Larry Randall, a B-52 pilot in the U.S. Air Force.Andrea has been by Larry's side for twenty-three years, dutifully serving as helpmate and mother, moving from base to base, coping with Larry's combat tour in Vietnam, contributing her time to the activities of the Officers' Wives Club, and raising their two children.The novel is set in September 1982 at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, where Andrea is alone because Larry has taken a one year, unaccompanied tour to Turkey.The Randall's son, Brian, is now a B-52 Bomber pilot like his father and their daughter, Tricia, is a sophomore in college.Andrea has an established circle of friends, community activities to keep her busy, and is near Tricia.She resents Larry's decision to go to Turkey alone, but accepts it as necessary for his career and presumes the year will pass uneventfully.Then she meets Sam.Sam -- Samantha Dearden -- is a Department of the Air Force civilian employee who arrives from Washington, D.C., where she worked in the Pentagon.She is ten years younger than Andrea, divorced, a single mother, openly snubs conventional behavior with her nonchalant promiscuity, and is altogether an unlikely companion.Yet Sam's cavalier attitude is combined with perceptive warmth, and she recognizes a need in Andrea to perhaps move beyond the narrow part she has played in life.Sam introduces Andrea to a "Cheers-like" group of younger Air Force officers who routinely meet at the Officers' Club for drinks, dinner and conversation.Big Mac, Hank, Ginny, and Paula are single and part of a changing Air Force; the new generation, untried in combat, more open in their views of sex, love, and marriage.Andrea is simultaneously interested and puzzled as she wonders if the freedom and choices they face are better than the social constraints she occasionally feels.Andrea is initially reluctant to join the group, unable to believe she has anything in common with them.She is, however, intrigued by the idea and is aware that for the first time in her adult life she has free time on her hands since the family duties which traditionally consumed her have virtually disappeared.The group doesn't treat her as "the Colonel's wife", and during the months that pass, the reader watches Andrea open up and enter a time of personal growth.It is also a period of conflict, however, for there are moments when Andrea withdraws, uncomfortable with the feelings she experiences with Sam's disregard for public opinion.It is difficult for her to understand Sam's philosophical advice of, "you get drunk, you get laid, and you get over it," when Paula's romantic hopes are unfulfilled.Andrea is torn between her affection for Sam and the opinions of those who disapprove of her lifestyle. Yet, even as Andrea begins to expand her concept of what is morally acceptable, she discovers her husband, Larry, disapproves of her new friends, and there are indications he may be having an affair with a female Captain in Turkey.Her marriage and the security she has known is threatened, a possibility she had previously considered remote.Could it be her life has been built on a false foundation which is crumbling?The more she sees around her, the less certain she is about her own life, about the clash between surface appearances and the truth beneath social niceties.Andrea's doubts about Larry are fueled by a series of disturbing coincidences and her struggle with her unforeseen trauma is further complicated when Sam becomes involved in an explosive situation that could have serious personal consequences.The subsequent emotional turmoil surrounding these events forces Andrea to re-examine the views she had always accepted as unshakable truths. It is this examination that causes Andrea to better understand how she truly feels about herself and those close to her.

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